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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!destroyer!ubc-cs!unixg.ubc.ca!physics.ubc.ca!unruh
- From: unruh@physics.ubc.ca (William Unruh)
- Subject: Re: Help needed to keep the TIME
- Message-ID: <unruh.714801451@physics.ubc.ca>
- Keywords: time, help
- Sender: news@unixg.ubc.ca (Usenet News Maintenance)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: physics.ubc.ca
- Organization: University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
- References: <Alex.29.714747452@camp.wpic.pitt.edu> <francis.49.0@mpl.ucsd.edu> <BtKA1t.Myt@ais.org>
- Date: Wed, 26 Aug 1992 03:57:31 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- draper@ais.org (Patrick Draper) writes:
-
- >I'm confused by the whole PC clock issue. I *know* that the clock maintained
- >y DOS is screwy.
- ...
-
- >Is the internal hardware clock quartz accurate? If not, why the heck can't
- >it be that way? I can't believe that in order to be IBM compatible the
- >mother board manufacturers even duplicated a clock that drifts around...
-
- There's a quartz crystal that controls the whole computer.
- The Dos clock is software- gets updated at the clock interrupts I
- believe- so if some program shuts off the interrupts for a while...
- Or if some program runs amok and writes to the few bytes where the clock
- time is kept...
- 1 second/month= 1 part in 100,000 accuracy- why would they trim their
- crystals to better than that ( or even that well)
- There are also some Dos programs which dial up the US Naval Observatory
- and set the internal clock form that I have one ( not tried) called
- gettime which I think I got of wuarchive.wustl.edu- Try archie to find
- it
- but I remember there were a bunch of others as well
- Just looked up- there are programs called stime,usnotime,nbscom12 which
- claim to phone up th e Naval Observatory or NBS to set the PC time.
- There is another one called clkdev14 which claims to keep the DOS time
- in sync with the on board clock on AT's. ( I think these ar ein
- msdos/sysutl on wuarchive)
- I don't know what accuracy is required, but a phone call every day say
- could set the clock sufficiently accurately
-
-